The foundation of the first French journal of
psychiatry
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Presentation by Serge NICOLAS Professor of
history of psychology and experimental psychology. University
Paris Descartes - Institut de psychologie. Editor-in-chief
of L’Année psychologique Laboratoire Psychologie et
Neurosciences cognitives. CNRS – FRE 2987. 71, avenue
Edouard Vaillant 92774 Boulogne-Billancourt Cedex, France.
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Translation by Karine
DEBBASCH |
Pinel : The founder of modern psychiatry
Philippe Pinel (1745-1826) always shared Cabanis’ (1757-1808)
views on medicine; he actually chose to entitle his most famous
book Traité médico-philosophique de l'aliénation mentale
(Medico-Philosophical Treatise on Mental Alienation) (Year IX,
1800). This book[1] had been
anticipated for some time in contemporary medical and
philosophical circles as large excerpts had already been presented
to a students’ society and at the Académie des sciences between
1796 and 1800. It is divided into six sections that are intended
to present the bases and the rules of moral treatment. In the
first section, Pinel presents a study on periodic or intermittent
mania[2] (pp. 7-47), which he
considered as the paradigmatic form of mental alienation. In the
second section, he states the principles and rules of the moral
treatment of the insane[3] (pp.
48-105), consisting in modifying the patient’s imagination and
feelings by exerting moral influence on him or her, thus
triggering fear and respect. It would then become possible to act
on the body, where the epigastric trouble was considered to lie.
In the third section, devoted to anatomical research on cranial
deformities of the insane[4]
(pp. 106-134), he demonstrates that the various forms of mental
alienation are hardly ever linked with organic lesions of the
brain (except in the case of idiotism). In his fourth section, he
addresses the division of mental alienation into different
categories[5] (pp. 135-176) so
as to shed light on those which could best be treated. Adopting
Condillac’s method, he defines five types of mental alienation:
melancholy, mania without delirium, mania with delirium, dementia
or abolition of thought, and idiotism or obliteration of the
intellectual and emotional faculties[6].
In the fifth section, Pinel focuses on inside police and
surveillance to be established in asylums (pp. 177-226). In the
sixth section, he mentions principles of medical treatment (pp.
227-304) for those patients whose moral treatment has failed.
Pinel’s book constitutes a historical landmark[7]: French psychiatry started to develop after
its publication.
From the foundation of the annales médico-psychologiques (1843)…
Pinel’s successors continued the programme that Cabanis had
initiated and were the first figures of the emerging disciplines
of French psychiatry. His classification of mental disorders was
adopted by his celebrated pupil Étienne Esquirol (1772-1840), the
architect of the famous French law on internment (June 30, 1838),
who developed Pinel’s conception of monomanias as an aspect of
melancholy (see Des maladies mentales considérées sous les
rapports médical, hygiénique et médico-légal, 1838. On-line in
Medica :
), and also by Étienne Georget (1795-1828), who
individualized mental confusion as a characteristic of acute
dementia.
The first issue of the Annales Médico-Psychologiques appeared in
1843 ; Jules Baillarger (1809-1890), Laurent Cerise (1807-1869)
and F.A. Longet (1811-1871) founded this journal to study mental
and nervous disorders, as indicated in the subtitle: "Journal
of the anatomy, physiology and pathology of the nervous system,
especially destined to gather together all the documents
concerning the science of the relationship between physical and
moral states, mental pathology, forensic medicine of the insane,
and the clinical study of neuroses". Then, in 1852, the
Société médico-psychologique was founded. These two events were
part of Cabanis' and Pinel's legacy. Along with the creation of
the Annales médico-psychologiques in 1843 came the organization of
an association of psychiatrists, which marked the beginning of a
professional identity. Cerise was responsible for articles dealing
with general medical and psychological questions, Baillarger for
articles dealing with mental pathology and Longet for those
dealing more specifically with the anatomy and physiology of the
nervous system. In the introduction that Cerise wrote for the
first issue of January 1843, one may read that this «journal of
the anatomy, physiology and pathology of the nervous system,
especially destined to gather together all the documents
concerning the science of the relationship between physical and
moral states, mental pathology, forensic medicine of the insane,
and the clinical study of neuroses», is not the fruit of an
original idea of the creators'; it is part of Pinel's legacy. At
the beginning of the 1840s, psychiatry was a science that had yet
to be constituted; creating the Annales was the first step in this
direction. Right from the start, the new journal was open to
debates. In the very first issues, after the publications of L. F.
Lélut (1804-1877), there was a controversy over hallucinations, in
which Alfred Maury (1817-1892), Louis Calmeil (1798-1895) and
Alexandre Brierre de Boismont (1797-1881) participated. Many other
disputes and discussions followed this first debate in the history
of the journal[8], especially
related to the work of the Société médico-psychologique, which was
published in the Annales. In fact, the journal and the Société
were to become closely linked.
…to the creation of the société médico-psychologique (1852)
In the first issue of January 1843
, Baillarger suggested the creation in France of an
association of psychiatrists, which he mentioned under the name
Société médico-psychologique in July 1843[9]. But the project lay dormant. In 1845,
Bénédict-Augustin Morel (1809-1873) in turn declared his wish that
such a medical society existed; its purpose would be to study all
that is related to the pathology and physiology of the nervous
system, to work at improving insane asylums, and also to keep its
members abreast of all that was done and published in the field of
psychiatry in other countries. It was in this context that, in
1846, Baillarger mentioned again his initial project, insisting on
its relevance: «the necessary conditions for studying many aspects
of mental diseases can only be obtained through an association of
physicians working together to find the solutions to questions
that they have already discussed »
. He declared at the same time that the publication of the
work of such an association could be undertaken by the Annales.
Having gathered numerous subscriptions, Baillarger and Cerise
announced in the first Annales issue of the year 1848
that the Société médico-psychologique had been created
in Paris on December 18, 1847. «The organization that has just
been created is comprised not only of most of the physicians whose
lives are devoted to the study and treatment of insanity, but also
of a fixed number of physiologists, administrators, scholars,
jurisconsults, moralists and philosophers whose work is more or
less directly linked with the knowledge or governance of man as a
moral and intellectual entity»
. The rules had even been discussed and adopted by a
committee of founding members; the goal they wished to reach had
been thus defined: «The Société's purpose is to study and improve
mental pathology. It encompasses in its work all the accessory
sciences that can favor its progress»
. But the political circumstances and the Revolution of 1848
stopped the official creation of the Société. Incidentally, it was
also in 1848-1849 that changes in the publication policy were
made: it was decided that the anatomy and physiology of the
nervous system and the relationship of body to mind, along with
other metaphysical topics, would be left out, so that the journal
might concentrate more on mental diseases. The subtitle of the
Annales was changed into: «Journal destined to gather together all
the documents concerning mental alienation, neuroses, and the
forensic medicine of the insane»
. Additionally, after 1849, the two sections entitled
«general medico-psychological points » and «physiology» were
permanently suppressed. The journal was thus becoming purely
«alienist».
Only a few years later the Annales published the report of a
committee comprised of Amédée Dechambre (1812-1886), Édouard
Carrière (1808-1883) and Claude-François Michéa (1815-1882), whose
responsibility it was to prepare new rules and to do what was
necessary to constitute at last a largely interdisciplinary
Société médico-psychologique
. On April 26, 1852, the founders met and nominated the
officers. They elected Guillaume-Marie-André Ferrus (1784-1861) as
President, and Pierre-Nicolas Gerdy (1797-1856) as Vice-President.
Dechambre, the famous journalist, was nominated Secretary General;
Brierre de Boismont (1798-1881), secretary-treasurer; Michéa,
archivist secretary. The editorial board was made up of Buchez,
Baillarger and Cerise. The Société médico-psychologique held its
first session on June 28, 1852
. From the day that the Société was founded, the editors in
chief of the Annales always considered it among their first duties
to publish the minutes of the Société's meetings, which Baillarger
and his collaborators did for a period of 48 years, followed by
Ritti for 35 years, and so on. Reading the successive volumes of
the Annales allows one to have insight into the historical
evolution of «alienism» and also to have access to many of the
founding papers in psychiatry.
List of the presidents of the société médico-psychologique
(1852-1937)
1852-53 |
FERRUS |
1853-54 |
GERDY |
1854-55 |
BUCHEZ |
1855-56 |
PARCHAPPE |
1856-57 |
PEISSE |
1857-58 |
BAILLARGER |
1858-59 |
CERISE |
1859-60 |
TRÉLAT |
1861 |
BRIERRE DE BOISMONT |
1862 |
A. GARNIER |
1863 |
DELASIAUVE |
1864 |
MOREAU DE TOURS |
1865 |
GIRARD DE CAILLEUX |
1866 |
F. VOISIN |
1867 |
JANET |
1868 |
BROCHIN |
1869 |
CONSTANS |
1870-71 |
LASÈGUE |
1872 |
FALRET |
1873 |
LUNIER |
|
1874 |
LOISEAU |
1875 |
BLANCHE |
1876 |
DUMESNIL |
1877 |
BILLOD |
1878 |
BAILLARGER |
1879 |
LUCAS |
1880 |
LEGRAND DU SAULE |
1881 |
LUYS |
1882 |
DALLY |
1883 |
MOTET |
1884 |
FOVILLE |
1885 |
DAGONET |
1886 |
SEMELAIGNE |
1887 |
MAGNAN |
1888 |
COTARD |
1889 |
FALRET |
1890 |
BAILLARGER |
1891 |
BOUCHEREAU |
1892 |
ROUSSEL |
1893 |
CHRISTIAN |
|
1894 |
A. VOISIN |
1895 |
MOREAU DE TOURS |
1896 |
CHARPENTIER |
1897 |
P. GARNIER |
1898 |
MEURIOT |
1899 |
J. VOISIN |
1900 |
MAGNAN |
1901 |
JOFFROY |
1902 |
MOTET |
1903 |
BALLET |
1904 |
BRUNET |
1905 |
VALLON |
1906 |
BRIAND |
1907 |
DENY |
1908 |
SÉGLAS |
1909 |
LEGRAS |
1910 |
ARNAUD |
1911 |
SÉRIEUX |
1912 |
KLIPPEL |
1913 |
R. SELEMAIGNE |
1914-16 |
VIGOUROUX |
|
1917 |
CHASLIN |
1918 |
COLIN |
1919 |
DUPAIN |
1920 |
TRÉNEL |
1921 |
PACTET |
1922 |
TOULOUSE |
1923 |
ANTHEAUME |
1924 |
TRUELLE |
1925 |
ROUBINOVITCH |
1926 |
SOLLIER |
1927 |
LEGRAIN |
1928 |
LEROY |
1929 |
Pierre JANET |
1930 |
CAPGRAS |
1931 |
CLAUDE |
1932 |
MARCHAND |
1933 |
G. DUMAS |
1934 |
MIGNOT |
1935 |
Th. SIMON |
1936 |
VURPAS |
1937 |
CHARPENTIER |
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Notes
[1] For a recent facsimile re-edition of
the original edition: Pinel, Ph. (2006). Sur l’aliénation
mentale. Traité médico-philosophique (1800). Paris:
L’Harmattan. – Also see on-line, Gallica’s website, the Year IX
edition and the second edition of 1809.
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[2] This section is a re-edition of an
earlier text: Pinel, Ph. (1797, Year V-VI). Mémoire sur la
manie périodique ou intermittente. Mémoires de la Société
Médicale d’Émulation, 1, 94-119. [BIUM shelf mark: 90.090] |
[3] This, too, is the re-edition of an
earlier text: Pinel, Ph. (1798, Year VI-VII). Recherches et
observations sur le traitement moral des aliénés. Mémoires de
la Société Médicale d’Émulation, 2, 215-255. |
[4] This is the edition of a paper that was
read at the Académie des Sciences on March 7, 1800 (Ventôse 16
Year VIII). |
[5] This is the re-edition of an earlier
text: Pinel, Ph. (1799, Year VII-VIII). Observations sur les
aliénés et leur division en espèces distinctes. Mémoires de la
Société Médicale d’Émulation, 3, 1-26. |
[6] In the second edition (1809) Pinel
proposes the following classification: "If one constantly
observes and carefully studies their symptoms, one can
establish a general classification, and differentiate them
according to fundamental alterations to their understanding or
their will, notwithstanding their innumerable variety. A more
or less intense delirium on almost any object is, for a number
of lunatics, associated with an agitated, maniacal state: such
is the definition of mania. The delirium can also be exclusive
and confined to a given series of objects, and be associated
with a form of stupor and with deep, vivid emotions: it is what
we call melancholy. Sometimes a general debility affects the
intellectual and emotional faculties, as is the case in old
age, constituting what is called dementia. Finally, an
obliteration of reason with short, automatic periods of anger
is called idiotism. These are the four types of mental turmoil
generally referred to under the label mental alienation"
(Pinel, p. 5). See Pinel, Ph. (2005). Traité
médico-philosophique sur l’aliénation mentale (2nd edition,
1809). Paris: Les empêcheurs de penser en rond/ Le Seuil. [BIUM
shelf mark: 189.059] |
[7] For a biograph yand an analysis of
Pinel’s work: Pigeaud, J. (2001). Aux portes de la psychiatrie.
Pinel, l’ancien et le moderne. Paris: Aubier. [BIUM shelf mark:
185777 / Cupboard 5 HM Psychiatry 23] - Postel, J. (1998).
Genèse de la psychiatrie. Les premiers écrits de Philippe
Pinel. Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. [BIUM shelf
mark: 176122] - Sémelaigne, R. (2001). Philippe Pinel et son
œuvre au point de vue de la santé mentale. Paris: L’Harmattan.
[BIUM shelf mark: 232931-47] - Weiner, D. B. (1999). Comprendre
et soigner. Philippe Pinel (1745-1826). La médecine de
l’esprit. Paris: Fayard. [BIUM shelf mark: 233230-8 / Cupboard
5 HM Psychiatry 14] |
[8] Ritti, A. (1902). Histoire des travaux
de la Société médico-psychologique (1852-1902). Annales
Médico-Psychologiques, 8th series, volume 16, sixtieth year,
27-131 [ https://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/histmed/medica/page?90152x1902x16&p=27
].
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[9] To see the history of the Société’s
creation: Dowbiggin, I. (1989). French psychiatry and the
search for a professional identity: The Société
Médico-Psychologique, 1840-1870. Bulletin of the History of
Medicine, 63 (3) 331-355. [BIUM shelf mark: 110.014A] |
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